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The following figure presents 8605 Smart Router interface numbering.. The following figure presents 8607 Smart Router interface numbering.. The following figure presents 8609 Smart Route

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76.8600-50117J 15.05.2015

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Revision History

Document No Date Description of Changes

76.8600-50117J 15.05.2014 FP7.0 updates for the following network elements:

• 8609 Smart Router and 8611 Smart RouterFP2.0

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The functionality described in this document for 8615 Smart Router is also applicable to

8615 Smart Router stacked, unless otherwise stated

© 2015 Coriant All rights reserved.

This manual is protected by U.S and international copyright laws, conventions and treaties Your right to use this manual is subject to limitations and restrictions imposed by applicable licenses and copyright laws Unauthorized reproduction, modification,

distribution, display or other use of this manual may result in criminal and civil penalties.

The specifications and information regarding the products in this manual are subject to change without notice All statements, information, and recommendations in this manual are believed to be accurate but are presented without warranty of any kind,

express or implied Users must take full responsibility for their application of any products.

Adobe ® Reader ® are registered trademarks of Adobe Systems Incorporated in the United States and/or other countries.

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Terms and Abbreviations

Term Explanation

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LSA Link State Advertisement

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SW Software

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Table of Contents

About This Manual 17

Objectives 17

Audience 17

CLI Command Definition Structure 18

Documentation Feedback 19

1 CLI Commands Introduction 21

1.1 Overview 21

1.2 CLI Command Modes 21

1.3 Viewing Router Configuration and State 23

1.4 Preserving Configuration Changes at Reboot 23

1.5 Interface Numbering and Legal IF Modules 23

1.5.1 8602 Smart Router 23

1.5.2 8605 Smart Router 24

1.5.3 8607 Smart Router 24

1.5.4 8609 Smart Router 25

1.5.5 8611 Smart Router 25

1.5.6 8615 Smart Router 26

1.5.7 8615 Smart Router stacked 26

1.5.8 8620 Smart Router 27

1.5.9 8630 Smart Router 28

1.5.10 8660 Smart Router 29

1.5.11 8665 Smart Router 30

2 CLI Commands Release History 33

2.1 Added Commands 34

2.2 Modified Commands 38

3 Basic CLI Commands 41

3.1 Overview 41

3.2 Commands 42

4 Interface Basic CLI Commands 63

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4.1 Overview 63

4.2 Basic Commands 64

4.3 Interface Bandwidth Commands 108

5 Interface ATM CLI Commands 111

5.1 Overview 111

5.2 Commands 112

6 Interface DSL CLI Commands 167

6.1 Overview 167

6.2 Dsl Commands 168

6.3 Bonding Commands 183

7 Interface Ethernet CLI Commands 187

7.1 Overview 187

7.2 Basic Commands 188

7.3 Link Aggregation Commands 225

7.4 Ethernet OAM Commands 260

7.5 Ethernet Bridging Commands 307

7.6 VPLS Commands 339

8 Interface Frame Relay CLI Commands 349

8.1 Overview 349

8.2 Commands 350

9 Interface HDLC CLI Commands 363

9.1 Overview 363

9.2 Commands 364

10 Interface PDH CLI Commands 365

10.1 Overview 365

10.2 PDH / SDH Commands 366

10.3 PWE3 Commands 421

10.4 Abis Commands 438

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11 Interface PPP CLI Commands 457

11.1 Overview 457

11.2 Commands 458

12 Interface SDH CLI Commands 503

12.1 Overview 503

12.2 Commands 504

13 Interface Synchronization CLI Commands 529

13.1 Overview 529

13.2 IEEE 1588 Commands 530

13.3 Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) Commands 581

13.4 Node Synchronization Commands 588

14 IP Basic CLI Commands 637

14.1 Overview 637

14.2 Basic Commands 638

14.3 Bidirectional Forwarding Detection Commands 700

14.4 VRRP Commands 704

15 IP Hosting CLI Commands 725

15.1 Overview 725

15.2 ARP Protocol Commands 726

15.3 DHCP Protocol Commands 739

15.4 DNS Commands 758

15.5 ICMP Commands 768

15.6 IP / TCP / UDP Protocol Commands 774

16 IP Routing Common CLI Commands 787

16.1 Overview 787

16.2 Commands 788

17 IP Routing BGP Basic CLI Commands 877

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17.2 Commands 878

18 IP Routing BGP VPN CLI Commands 1155

18.1 Overview 1155

18.2 Commands 1156

19 IP Routing CSPF-TE CLI Commands 1189

19.1 Overview 1189

19.2 Commands 1190

20 IP Routing ISIS CLI Commands 1219

20.1 Overview 1219

20.2 Commands 1220

21 IP Routing OSPF CLI Commands 1357

21.1 Overview 1357

21.2 Commands 1358

22 IP VPN CLI Commands 1547

22.1 Overview 1547

22.2 Commands 1548

23 IP Packet Loop Test CLI Commands 1573

23.1 Overview 1573

23.2 Commands 1574

24 Layer 2 Tunneling CLI Commands 1591

24.1 Overview 1591

24.2 Commands 1592

25 MPLS Basic CLI Commands 1627

25.1 Overview 1627

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25.3 MPLS-TP Commands 1671

26 MPLS LDP CLI Commands 1695

26.1 Overview 1695

26.2 Commands 1696

27 MPLS RSVP-TE CLI Commands 1849

27.1 Overview 1849

27.2 Commands 1851

28 Node Equipment Management CLI Commands 2105

28.1 Overview 2105

28.2 Commands 2106

29 Node Fault Management CLI Commands 2145

29.1 Overview 2145

29.2 Commands 2146

30 Node Management Agent CLI Commands 2175

30.1 Overview 2175

30.2 Common Management Commands 2176

30.3 BMP Agent Commands 2178

30.4 CLI Agent Commands 2216

30.5 FTP Server Commands 2230

30.6 SNMP Agent Commands 2234

31 Node Realtime Clock CLI Commands 2251

31.1 Overview 2251

31.2 Commands 2252

32 Node Software Management CLI Commands 2283

32.1 Overview 2283

32.2 Commands 2284

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33 Node Testing and Measurement CLI Commands 2299

33.1 Overview 2299

33.2 CPU load and Memory usage Commands 2300

33.3 Fan, Powers, Temperature and Voltage Commands 2307

33.4 System Message Logging (syslog) Commands 2311

34 Protection CLI Commands 2333

34.1 Overview 2333

34.2 Equipment Protection Commands 2334

34.3 Management IF Protection Commands 2338

34.4 Ethernet Layer Protection Commands 2340

34.5 SDH MS Protection Commands 2351

34.6 SONET APS Protection Commands 2362

34.7 MPLS LSP Protection Commands 2372

34.8 MPLS-TP Tunnel Protection Commands 2373

35 Quality of Service CLI Commands 2385

35.1 Overview 2385

35.2 Commands 2386

36 Security CLI Commands 2469

36.1 Overview 2469

36.1.1 Privilege Levels 2469

36.2 Username Authentication Commands 2470

36.3 SSH Commands 2487

36.4 Terminal Configuration Commands 2495

36.5 Other Commands 2511

37 Security AAA CLI Commands 2513

37.1 Overview 2513

37.2 Commands 2514

Index of All Commands 2556

Index of Commands for 8602 Smart Router 2581

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Index of Commands for 8605 Smart Router 2600

Index of Commands for 8607 Smart Router 2621

Index of Commands for 8609 Smart Router 2640

Index of Commands for 8611 Smart Router 2662

Index of Commands for 8615 Smart Router 2684

Index of Commands for 8665 Smart Router 2705

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About This Manual

This chapter discusses the objectives and intended audience of this manual, 8600 Smart Routers CLI Commands Manual and consists of the following sections:

This manual is divided into chapters, each describing a different set of commands groupedaccording to their functionality

Commands Introduction

Audience

This manual is designed for network element installation and administration personnelwho are configuring the 8600 system with CLI On the other hand, 8600 IntelligentNetwork Manager provides access to equal functionality for administration personnelwith a graphical user interface

Since this manual does not explain any of the functional concepts behind CLI commands,

or give any configuration guidelines, it is assumed that you have a basic understanding ofEthernet, POS, IP, MPLS, VPN and Differentiated Services concepts This manual alsoassumes that you are familiar with one or more of the following protocols:

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CLI Command Definition Structure

All the CLI commands are defined according to the same fixed structure The followingchapters divide the structure into sections present in each command description

<command name>

The command syntax explanation begins with the command name The name is typicallythe first words you type when entering the command, though some exceptions exist

Command Description

This section contains a short description of the command functionality More information is

available in the Usage Guidelines section.

Command Syntax

This section contains the full syntax of the command with the parameter explanation.Different products may have different syntaxes or there may be commands or parametersavailable for certain products only In such cases, the product name is associated with thesyntax and parameters If no product names are specified, all the products this manualcovers support the command

The syntax is presented with the following notations:

bold Bold text indicates words, which are literally written as shown

italics Italic text indicates argument for which a value must be

supplied

| A vertical line indicates a choice of values The symbol is

not part of the command, i.e not typed when typing the CLIcommand

[ x | y ] Square brackets indicate optional value(s) These symbols

are not part of the command, i.e not typed when typing the

CLI command

{ x | y } Braces indicate mandatory value(s) These symbols are not

part of the command, i.e not typed when typing the CLIcommand

Most commands have the no option in the beginning of the command It is typically used

to cancel the command given earlier and to return to the router default values Whencanceling the command, only the number of parameters (from the beginning) needed touniquely identify the command are required, though all parameters can be given

The parameter explanation part includes parameter explanation, value ranges and defaultvalues

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Command Mode

This section contains the mode in which the command is available

Command Release History

This section contains the command release history i.e the release when the command isintroduced or changed and the description of the change

In the case of 8660 Smart Router and 8630 Smart Router, the release where the command

is introduced is documented either at network element or control and line card level Noticethat when 8620 Smart Router is not separately identified, it generally corresponds to theearliest specified CDC1 or IFC1 release

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1 CLI Commands Introduction

The command-line interface (CLI) is an interface for configuring and monitoring 8600products with ASCII textual commands using a router's console or remote terminal (e.g.telnet) The CLI interface gives full control to all of the router's functionality

The following products are currently supported:

The CLI commands are divided into several command modes based on the functionality ofthe router Each command mode has its own set of commands available for configuringand monitoring the router The commands available to you at any given time depend onthe mode you are in Entering a question mark (?) at the router prompt allows you to obtain

a list of commands available for each command mode

There are shortcuts which allow mode changing directly without going via a commonparent These commands are marked with '->' at the beginning of the command in order tonot to confuse these with functionality offered by command mode

The figure below presents the CLI command modes It also show the commands enteringand leaving the modes

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Fig 1 CLI Command Modes

Each rectangle represents one mode, and arrows indicate how to change the modes Thetext in parenthesis inside rectangles represents the text shown in the command prompt,and it indicates the mode you are in

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purposes, only monitoring commands are available This level of access is reserved fortasks that do not change the configuration or state of the router.

The next mode is the Privilege mode In addition to the Read Only mode commands,

you can now also give various one-time commands like deleting or copying a file, orclearing statistic counters These commands are not considered as configuration changingcommands

From the Privilege mode, you can enter the Configuration mode In this mode, you can

enter commands that configure general system characteristics The subsequent modes

configure a certain functional area, e.g OSPF protocol (Router OSPF Configuration

mode) The configuration changes are saved if the router reboots

When making configuration changes, the changes are stored in Running Configuration,

which always represents the current configuration of the router In other words, changes to

the configuration take effect each time you press the Enter/Return key at the end of a valid command in the Configuration mode or its subsequent modes.

Running Configuration does not contain all the commands you have given, but only the

latest ones if they have changed the default values of the router Each command has aplace in the file Thus, they always give the same look and feel regardless of the order inwhich you have originally given the commands The order is designed so that they can beexecuted in the presented order when configuring the router

The Running Configuration can be viewed with the command show running-config

in any command mode

All the state and status information is accessible with show commands They can also

be used at any command mode

The Running Configuration is automatically stored into non-volatile memory (FLASH)

real-time, as the configuration changes are entered, and therefore configurations arepreserved at reboot

In many CLI commands there is a need to identify the interface Therefore, numbers

associated with the physical entity are used

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Fig 2 8602 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as module/if For example, the last interface is referred as 5/0.

The following figure presents 8605 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

Fig 3 8605 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7) in

module 1 is referred as 1/7.

The following figure presents 8607 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

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Fig 4 8607 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7) in

module 1 is referred as 1/7.

The following figure presents 8609 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

Fig 5 8609 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7) in

module 3 is referred as 3/7.

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Fig 6 8611 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as slot/module/if (slot being fixed 2) For example, the 8th

interface (interface 7) in module 3 is referred as 2/3/7.

The following figure presents 8615 Smart Router interface numbering

Fig 7 8615 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as 13/module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7)

in module 1 is referred as 13/1/7.

The following figure presents Stacked 8615 Smart Router interface numbering Stacked isconstructed by connecting two 8615 together

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Fig 8 8615 Smart Router stacked IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as slot/module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7)

in module 1 is referred as 13/1/7.

The following figure presents 8620 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

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Fig 9 8620 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7) in

module 1 is referred as 1/7.

The following figure presents 8630 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

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Fig 10 8630 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as slot/module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7)

in module 0 in slot 6 is referred as 6/0/7.

In CLI command definitions in following chapters, the commands / value ranges are notmentioned for 8630 separately All the commands specified for 8660 are supported for

8630 with exception that IFC slot numbers are 6 9 instead of 8660's 2 13

The following figure presents 8660 Smart Router interface numbering It also show legalmodule positions for supported modules

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Fig 11 8660 Smart Router IF Numbering

The interfaces are referred to as slot/module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7)

in module 0 in slot 3 is referred as 3/0/7

The following figure presents 8665 Smart Router interface numbering

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Fig 12 8665 Smart Router IF Numbering

The control unit functionality is in virtual control unit (vCU) which is located in LU unit inslots 2 and 13 and accessed via unit numbers 1 and 14 respectively

The interfaces are referred to as slot/module/if For example, the 8th interface (interface 7)

in module 1 in slot 3 is referred as 3/1/7

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2 CLI Commands Release History

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2.1 Added Commands

This section lists the CLI commands introduced in the latest feature packs for NEsdocumented in this manual

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eth lag load-balance hash-protocols 8615 FP 7.0

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show eth lacp link 8615 FP 7.0

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2.2 Modified Commands

This section lists the CLI commands that have been modified in the latest feature packs forNEs documented in this manual, followed by a description of the change

arp timeout Default value changed 8660/8630/8620 FP 7.0

clear node-timing

ieee1588 master statistics

mpls ping Added support for BGP multipath 8660/8630/8620 FP 7.0

Support for BGP labeled-unicast and BGPmultipath added

mpls traceroute Support for BGP multipath added 8609 FP 7.0

Support for labeled unicast and BGPmultipath added

node-timing ieee1588

clock-domain

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Default value changed from 0 -> auto 8611 FP 7.0

redistribute isis Added support to l1 to l1 redistribution 8660/8630/8620 FP 7.0

reset-hw Power-off parameter added Added

stacked support

show faults active Added stacked support 8615 FP 7.0

show faults history Added stacked support 8615 FP 7.0

show ip forwarding-table Keyword from added 8660/8630/8620 FP 7.0

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vlan statistics Removed out-qos option 8660/8630/8620 FP 7.0

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